WO1998000334A1 - Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure Download PDFInfo
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- WO1998000334A1 WO1998000334A1 PCT/US1997/010410 US9710410W WO9800334A1 WO 1998000334 A1 WO1998000334 A1 WO 1998000334A1 US 9710410 W US9710410 W US 9710410W WO 9800334 A1 WO9800334 A1 WO 9800334A1
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- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 title description 7
- 230000033001 locomotion Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 39
- 238000005070 sampling Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 20
- 230000004044 response Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 14
- 230000000737 periodic effect Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 6
- 238000006073 displacement reaction Methods 0.000 claims description 15
- 230000006870 function Effects 0.000 description 19
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 description 8
- 230000007257 malfunction Effects 0.000 description 5
- 238000012545 processing Methods 0.000 description 5
- 238000009434 installation Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000001228 spectrum Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000004422 calculation algorithm Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000013461 design Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000012544 monitoring process Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000001052 transient effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000012937 correction Methods 0.000 description 2
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- 230000002238 attenuated effect Effects 0.000 description 1
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Classifications
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- G—PHYSICS
- G05—CONTROLLING; REGULATING
- G05D—SYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
- G05D1/00—Control of position, course, altitude or attitude of land, water, air or space vehicles, e.g. using automatic pilots
- G05D1/0055—Control of position, course, altitude or attitude of land, water, air or space vehicles, e.g. using automatic pilots with safety arrangements
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B64—AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
- B64D—EQUIPMENT FOR FITTING IN OR TO AIRCRAFT; FLIGHT SUITS; PARACHUTES; ARRANGEMENT OR MOUNTING OF POWER PLANTS OR PROPULSION TRANSMISSIONS IN AIRCRAFT
- B64D45/00—Aircraft indicators or protectors not otherwise provided for
- B64D45/0005—Devices specially adapted to indicate the position of a movable element of the aircraft, e.g. landing gear
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B64—AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
- B64D—EQUIPMENT FOR FITTING IN OR TO AIRCRAFT; FLIGHT SUITS; PARACHUTES; ARRANGEMENT OR MOUNTING OF POWER PLANTS OR PROPULSION TRANSMISSIONS IN AIRCRAFT
- B64D45/00—Aircraft indicators or protectors not otherwise provided for
- B64D45/0005—Devices specially adapted to indicate the position of a movable element of the aircraft, e.g. landing gear
- B64D2045/001—Devices specially adapted to indicate the position of a movable element of the aircraft, e.g. landing gear for indicating symmetry of flaps deflection
Definitions
- the present invention relates to methods and apparatus for determining malfunction of mechanical actuators, and more particularly, to aircraft in-flight equipment monitoring devices.
- Aircraft typically include a plurality of flaps arranged side by side on each wing for simultaneous actuation. Flap actuators are disposed generally in parallel at each side of the flaps. Also, to save weight and expense, as well as to provide operational redundancy for safety, a single actuator may be disposed between and connected to two adjacent flaps. Thus, three actuators may service two flaps, four actuators may service three flaps, etc.
- actuators are intended to move and hold the flaps in desired locations against aiding and/or resisting loads during aircraft operation. For example, full extension of the flaps to cause landing descent applies a high resisting load to the flaps.
- the flap actuators all operate in unison and precisely position the flaps according to control signals from the flight deck.
- the remaining adjacent actuator connected to that flap is typically sufficient to continue flap positioning, so much so that failure of the single actuator may not be readily noticeable in flight. In this way, a single defective actuator is said to be "dormant".
- LVDT linear variable displacement transducer
- Flap deflection in the event of a single actuator failure mode can be as slight as .03 inch.
- Typical LVDT's have a signal error proportional to the length of travel.
- typical LVDT errors can be ⁇ 0.5-1 .0%, over a typical six inch half stroke between the null and operating positions, LVDT accuracy ranges ⁇ .030-.060 inch.
- the failure mode of a flap detection of 0.03 inches can go undetected within the potential error range.
- such LVDT's are significantly more expensive.
- RVDT rotary velocity displacement transducer
- the present invention provides an improved method and apparatus for detecting actuator failure.
- An actuator system in accordance with the invention is:
- An actuation system in accordance with the present invention has at least one actuator attached to a structure, such as an airplane wing, and an element, such as a flap or carriage, to be moved relative to the structure.
- the actuator causes movement of the element along a path of travel between travel limits such as fully stowed and fully deployed positions of a wing flap.
- the actuator has a mode which occurs when the actuator has moved more than a fixed distance relative to a reference position, such as a non-commanded displacement of 0.03 inches of movement of an actuator which is operating a wing flap.
- the mode may include, without limitation, operations representing failure, detection, correction, positioning, control, etc.
- a position transducer in accordance with the invention which in one preferred embodiment of the invention is a LVDT, is coupled to the structure and the element for producing an output signal representing a position of the element along the path of travel and has a position resolution error along the path of travel greater than the fixed distance.
- the position sensor of the present invention is less expensive than position sensors which have a resolution greater than the fixed distance over the path of travel representing a mode because the position resolution error along the path of travel does not have to be less than the fixed distance representative of the mode to detect the mode.
- a processor is coupled to the output signal from the position transducer for sampling the output signal periodically a plurality of times during the movement of the element along the path of travel and in response to a plurality of samples, producing a signal indicating if a failure mode has occurred .
- the sampling rate of the periodic samples is chosen so that a distance that the actuator travels between successive samples times the position resolution error is less than the fixed distance representing the mode.
- the sampling rate is chosen to be sufficiently high that the resolution between successive samples produces a highly linear output as a consequence of the displacement of the actuator being a small fraction (e.g. less than 1 %) of the total path length of travel resulting in very little, if any, variation as a consequence of actuator/position transducer geometry.
- the distance that the actuator travels between samples times the position resolution error is less than 1 % of the fixed distance and preferably, is less than 0.002% of the fixed distance.
- the processor may compare a magnitude of each sample with another signal to produce the signal indicating if the mode has occurred.
- the another signal may be a magnitude of a previous sample from the same position transducer and the comparison may be a computation of a difference signal between each sample and the previous sample with an indication that the mode has occurred being produced when the computed difference exceeds a threshold.
- the threshold may be variable and may be a function of position and extension of the position transducer relative to the element.
- a bandpass filter is utilized to filter the output of the position transducer to reject signal components having a frequency spectra which is not representative of the mode.
- the pass band is chosen to pass variations in the output signal of the position transducer representative only of a possible mode with other signal frequency spectra being substantially attenuated by the bandpass filter because those rejected frequency spectra are representative of non-mode events.
- the bandpass filter may be digital in implementation and be implemented by a microprocessor.
- the actuation system in accordance with the invention may further include another actuator attached to the structure and the element to be moved relative to the structure.
- the another actuator also causes movement of the element along the path of travel between the travel limits relative to the structure and also, has a mode when the another actuator has moved more than the fixed distance representing the mode relative to a reference position on the path of travel during movement of the element along the path of travel between the travel limits.
- the another position transducer is coupled to the structure and to the element for producing an output signal representing a position of the element along the path of travel.
- the another position transducer also has a resolution error along the path of travel greater than the fixed distance representing the mode.
- the another signal may be a magnitude of a sample from the another position transducer and the comparison comprises computing a difference signal between concurrent samples from the position transducers.
- the difference signal may be bandpass filtered to reject frequency spectra not representative of the mode of either of the actuators.
- An indication that the mode has occurred is produced when the computed different signal exceeds a threshold.
- the threshold is variable and is a function of position and extension of the position transducers relative to the element.
- the bandpass filter has a pass band chosen to pass variations in the difference signal representative only of the mode.
- the processor may produce the signal indicating that the mode has occurred only after a computation of a plurality of successively computed difference signals exceeding the threshold has occurred.
- the successive samples of the position transducer are compared to a reference parameter which preferably is a previous sample with the difference between the successive samples being computed.
- a reference parameter which preferably is a previous sample with the difference between the successive samples being computed.
- An indication that the mode has occurred is produced when a difference between the successive samples exceeds a threshold.
- the threshold may be varied as a function of the displacement along the path of travel to compensate for changes in the actuator/position transducer extension geometry as the actuator extends and retracts.
- each position's transducer associated with each actuator which is moving the element are compared by computing a difference signal.
- the difference signal between the relative positions of the parallel actuators, as sensed by the associated position transducers is computed which is greater than a threshold, the mode has occurred.
- the present invention may also be used to check the integrity and operational status of the drive line for each wing for providing rotary power to the actuators which power wing flaps.
- position transducers which are preferably LVDT's, which are the most outboard LVDT's on each wing produce sampled output signals as described above.
- This implementation may use outboard position transducers in association with actuators or position transducers coupled between the structure and a carriage driving the element or directly to the element without connection to a carriage. The difference between samples produced by each outboard LVDT is computed. If the difference exceeds a threshold, the loss of integrity of the drive lines or a failure in one of the drive lines is indicated.
- a plurality of successive computations exceeding the threshold may be used to indicate a true failure and not a transient response.
- the benefit of this application of the actuation system of the present invention is that the outboard LVDT's perform dual functions of detecting drive line integrity and operational status and the functions as previously described.
- the use of single purpose dedicated sensors, such as RVDT's, is eliminated.
- Historical data of actuator position during and after flight can be stored for analysis.
- the stored data is used to study where fatigue and failure of actuators and other wing components has occurred and where wing to wing asymmetry exists.
- Asymmetry is detected with the position samples of two pairs of actuators respectively associated with corresponding wing flaps on the wings.
- the computation of a difference between the differences between the position detectors associated with the pairs of actuators on both wings which are operating corresponding wing flaps may be used to indicate the aforementioned asymmetry of wing panels which is indicative of a serious flight condition.
- Figs. 1 A and 1 B show a schematic view of an aircraft flap actuator in accordance with the present invention.
- Fig. 2 shows a partial schematic view of a first embodiment of a controller of Figs. 1 A and l b.
- Fig. 3 shows a partial schematic of another embodiment of a controller of Fig. 1.
- Fig. 4 illustrates LVDT output as a function of displacement for normal operation and during a failure mode of the actuator.
- Fig. 5 illustrates actuator movement of the type which should be analyzed and actuator movement of the type which should be rejected in the analysis of the output signals from samples of the position transducers.
- Fig. 6 illustrates the effect of non-parallel placement of position transducers relative to an actuator during extension at varying rates which introduce error which should be compensated for by the controller .
- Fig. 7 illustrates a graph in the frequency domain of a desired bandpass characteristic of a bandpass filter used for attenuating undesirable frequency components not indicative of a failure mode in accordance with the present invention.
- Fig. 8 illustrates a graph of a percentage of fault amplitude relative to a fault threshold as a function of time of the bandpass filter.
- Figs. 1 A and 1 B illustrate schematically a preferred embodiment of an actuator system in accordance with the present invention within an aircraft.
- the present invention may be used in diverse applications of actuation systems in which it is desired to obtain high positional accuracy in discriminating the position of the element being moved by the actuation system without the high expenditure necessary to obtain position transducers with high positional resolution.
- the components are not drawn to scale, but are simplified for ease of understanding.
- a preferred commercial embodiment would, for example, utilize the tracked flap actuator system supplied by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for the Canadair Global Express Aircraft.
- an aircraft 10 is provided having left and right (port and starboard) wings 1 1 and 12, respectively.
- Each wing includes a plurality of flaps 20, 21 and 22 on wing 1 1 and 23, 24 and 25 on wing 12.
- a power drive unit 14 has an output drive line comprised of segments 15a, 1 5b, 1 5c and 1 5d in wing 1 1 and segments 16a, 1 6b, 16c and 1 6d in wing 12. The segments couple rotary power to each of a plurality of actuators 30, 40, 50 and 60 in wing 1 1 and 70, 80, 80 and 100 in wing 1 2.
- the integrity and operational status of the drive line in each wing may be obtained by sampling the output signals produced by a pair of outboard LVDT's 34 and 104 respectively in wing 1 1 and wing 1 2 and comparing the difference therein with a threshold.
- the LVDT's 34 and 104 preferably have the dual use of functioning as part of the actuation system, as described below, and monitoring integrity and operational status of the drivelines.
- outboard LVDT's may be used without association with the actuation system in which each LVDT is coupled to the wing and to the carriages 31 or 101 or flaps 20 or 25. A large difference between corresponding samples from the LVDT's 34 and 104 is indicative of a driveline failure or an operational status problem.
- Each flap is connected to two flap actuators with one actuator being on each side of a flap.
- Control device 1 3 controls activation of the actuators to control the flaps.
- a single actuator could be attached between two flaps and connected to both flaps via a carriage/track mechanism.
- Actuators 30 and 40 are connected to carriages 31 and 41 to drive flap 20; actuators 40 and 50 are connected to carriages 41 and 51 to drive flap 21 ; actuators 50 and 60 are connected to carriage 51 and directly to flap 22; actuators 70 and 80 are directly connected to flap 23 and to carriage 81 ; actuators 80 and 90 are connected to carriages 81 and 91 to drive flap 24 and actuators 90 and 100 are connected to carriages 91 and 101 to drive flap 25.
- Each flap actuator is well known and includes a number of conventional components. However, for ease of understanding only the carriage and track of each actuator are separately designated herein.
- Actuator 30 is attached to a movable carriage 31 which is typically fixed to flap 20 and travels along track 32 between a fully retracted position A and a fully extended position B, corresponding respectively to the fully retracted and fully extended positions of flap 20.
- Actuators 40-100 are similarly associated with tracks 42, 52, 62, 72, 82, 92 and 102.
- LVDT's 34, 44, 54, 84, 94 and 104 are respectively connected to each actuator via carriages 31 , 41 , 51 , 81 , 91 and 101 through uniballs and links 38 which connect the flaps to the carriages.
- Each flap may be connected to adjacent carriages via four points with a total of seven constraints.
- Each LVDT is also preferably fixed to the wing via structure C. It is also necessary for each of the tracks and actuators to be fixed with respect to structure C.
- Each LVDT of the present invention can, for example, have an error of ⁇ 0.5% to 1 .0% over its stroke and have stroke length of 10-15 inches with no interconnecting linkage to the associated actuator.
- sampling of LVDT output at a rate numerous times during the time required to complete a path of travel between travel limits A and B produces sequential measurements representative of small displacements relative to the length of the path of travel of the element being moved by the actuator.
- the possible error in position resolution in terms of distance in comparison to the fixed displacement (e.g. 0.03 inches) of the actuator relative to a reference position representing a fault mode is extremely small which, for example, may be less than 1 % and preferably less than 0.005% of the fixed displacement.
- One such suitable LVDT is KAVLIO Corporation part number GM9547 (5910440).
- Output signals indicative of the length of movement of each stroke arm are provided via signal lines 1 10 to an analysis center or controller 200.
- the microprocessor controller 200 When driveline status of the drivelines comprised of segments 1 5a, 15b, 1 5c and 15d and 1 6a, 1 6b, 1 6c and 16d is being determined, the microprocessor controller 200 periodically samples output signals from the outboard LVDT's 34 and 104 and compares a difference between concurrent samples from each LVDT to a threshold. If the threshold is exceeded, then a driveline mode, such as malfunction or failure, is indicated.
- the sampling rate of the microprocessor of the output signals is chosen as a function of a distance that the outboard flaps travel between successive samples and the position resolution error so that sufficient resolution is provided compared to the position resolution error of the LVDT's between samples to provide a reliable indication of driveline status.
- the sampling rate may be chosen to be identical to the LVDT's used in association with the actuators.
- the controller 200 preferably includes structure for (1 ) recording historical positions of each actuator as a function of the output signals of its associated LVDT, (2) determining current actuator position as a function of the movement signal and most previous position, (3) comparing the position changes of parallel actuators, and (4) providing a failure signal in the event actuator motion does not meet the required parameters.
- a variety of conventional microprocessor circuits may be used for these functions.
- a comparison register 210 of large storage capacity for storing all of the sample values over the path of travel and historical data can be associated with each LVDT.
- a comparator 220 is connected to each LVDT and to register 210 to examine current and most recent position differences and a comparator 230 is connected between each adjacent LVDT to examine respective current position differences to account for gain between adjacent LVDT's.
- a failure signal indicator 240 is connected to comparators 230 to provide an output failure signal if any of the comparator examinations reveal a condition outside of acceptable, predetermined reference parameters. Upon receipt of such an output failure signal, the flight crew may, for example, elect to apply a flap brake as identified by block 250.
- each LVDT produces an output voltage corresponding to the LVDT stroke arm position with a characteristic as indicated at the top of Fig. 2 where between small displacements produced by a high sample rate produce a highly linear response.
- Controller 200 examines small, incremental motions of the stroke arm over a period of time that is a fraction of the period of time of actuator movement.
- a micro-processor can be used for this purpose and the increment of time for clocking can be on the order of 10 milliseconds.
- stroke arm travel in that period of time is on the order of .010 inch for a properly functioning actuator.
- the error associated with the exemplary lower cost LVDT having a relatively high resolution error for this amount of travel is ⁇ .00005 inch.
- a .030 step or reference value representative of a mode, such as a failure mode, predetermined for a given aircraft to be indicative of an actuator operational status, such as a malfunction or fault, is readily detectable with a high margin for error because the position error is less than 1 % and preferably less than 0.005% of the reference value.
- each comparator 220 Rather than comparing stroke arm position at each such examination with a fixed, initial null position, each comparator 220 preferably compares that new position with the most previously measured position. Thus, the position error between samples remains at ⁇ .00005 inch. In effect, the compared null position is reset with every incremental examination to the previous position.
- controller 200 also stores a plurality of positions measured in sequence, for example, over the 10 most recent increments, to determine if a failure mode or deterioration has occurred over a broader span of time.
- the microprocessor By examining a plurality of successively computed differences to determine if the threshold fixed distance or reference value has been exceeded for a substantial period of time longer than any expected transient perturbances, the microprocessor is prevented from signalling that a fault condition has occurred which, in fact, was produced by a transient non-fault condition.
- controller 200 can verify the mode through comparators 230 by the examination of the movement of adjacent actuators and/or the complete actuator system. For example, as described below in Fig. 3, if one actuator fails, there is typically additional load and elastic strain on adjacent actuators connected to the same flap(s). Thus, an indication of a failure in one actuator can be verified by detection of a small jump in movement of adjacent actuators in the same time increment. The smaller jump typically is smaller than the predetermined set distance representing failure of the actuator which has actually failed but still is detectable within the range of error for the LVDT of the present invention.
- a predetermined reference value in this case .03 inch
- each comparator 230 can compare the incremental change in position of each actuator in the flap system to verify that each actuator is functioning synchronously within a wing or between two wings. A cross comparison between the position of actuator pairs moving the same wing panel in different wings permits a condition of asymmetry to be determined which is a potentially serious flight condition.
- each register 210 can advantageously include a permanent historical portion of each register 210 to store the rigged position of each actuator for given commanded flap positions at initial installation. Comparison with current actuator positions for such commanded positions at a later date is indicative of wear and drift over time. That information can be used, for example, to trigger routine maintenance and/or pre-failure inspection.
- each register 210 can be enlarged (or periodically unloaded to a data storage unit) to retain a record of all actuator movement continuously throughout the flight cycle. Such information can be useful in providing actual measurement of wing stresses and deflection under various load conditions.
- null position for failure detection is continuously reset, it is not necessary to have precise null rigging at initial installation of the detection system in the aircraft. Instead, clearances are set in installation and during the first flight and the permanent historical portion of register 210 is filled.
- Fig. 3 illustrates a second embodiment of processing performed by the controller of 200 of Fig. 1 .
- Fig. 3 illustrates the processing in terms of a flowchart which processes are programmed into a suitable microprocessor.
- the embodiment of Fig. 3 simplifies computationally the algorithm for performing position computations of pairs of LVDT's (position transducers) which are associated with pairs actuators which drive wing panels 20-25 of Figs. 1 A and 1 B.
- the process of Fig. 3 also adds robustness to make it immune to disturbances and geometric variations without adding undue complexity.
- the process of Fig. 3 permits the design to be traceable in a deterministic and straightforward way to a set of fundamental design criteria as described below in conjunction with Figs. 4-8.
- the processing illustrated in Fig. 3 is implemented in a controller which is microprocessor based, such as, but not limited to, the controller 200 of Fig. 2.
- the algorithm of Fig. 3 computes the position of each successive output of the LVDT position transducers 34, 44, 54, 64, 74, 84, 94, 104 in the same manner as described above by sampling successive outputs over a period of time such that the movement of the associated actuators 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 and 100 causes the elements 20, 21 , 22, 23, 24 and 25 which are being moved to move only a small portion of the path of travel between the travel limits A and B of Figs. 1 A-1 B.
- the detection of the failure of any actuator is determined by observing a small jump in movement of an adjacent actuator at the same time increment as described above. This small jump is computed by subtracting the output signals of LVDT's which are paired to detect the position of a single panel, such as LVDT's 34 and 44, which sense the position of panel 20.
- the outputs of adjacent pairs of position transducers LVDT1 , LVDT2, LVDT3 and LVDT4 each correspond to the LVDT position transducers 34, 44, 54 and 64 of Fig. 1 A or 74, 84, 94 and 104 of Fig. 1 B.
- the outputs of each of the LVDT's are sampled at a sampling interval such as, but not limited to, every 10 milliseconds as described above.
- the sampling of the individual LVDT outputs is performed under microprocessor control as described above.
- Processing proceeds with the pairs of outputs LVDT1 and LVDT2 and LVDT3 and LVDT4 being subtracted from each other to produce respective output signals X*- and X 2 .
- the output signals X, and X 2 are subjected to bandpass filtering which is implemented digitally within the microprocessor in accordance with a bandpass as described below.
- the outputs of the respective bandpass filters Y, and Y 2 are respectively compared to a threshold T. The comparison is such that the absolute value of the outputs Y, and Y 2 is compared to the threshold T to determine if the absolute value is larger than T.
- the value T is an input from a threshold generator which varies as a function of flap position to compensate for the geometric placement of the LVDT's with respect to the actuators which causes the LVDT's extension rate to change slowly as the actuators extend and retract. This error is normal and is accounted for by the variation of the threshold generator.
- the function generated by the threshold generator is uniquely modeled in accordance with the geometry of the particular system which is being controlled by an actuation system in accordance with the present invention such as, but not limited to, the control of wing flaps.
- the outputs are applied to a time filter, which is implemented in the microprocessor controller, for determining if a mode such as failure has occurred after computation of a plurality of successively computed difference signals exceeding the threshold T.
- the number of samples to cause the output from the time filter to indicate a SKEW FAULT is a design criteria which may varied depending upon the dynamics of the particular system and the degree of monitoring which is required.
- Fig. 3 The benefit of the processing of Fig. 3 in comparison to that of Fig. 2 is that it reduces the number of computations which are required to produce an output of a fault or other condition. Only LVDT differences across flap panels are computed instead of successive computations between successive samples of the outputs of each LVDT as described above in conjunction with Fig. 2.
- the computation algorithm of Fig. 3 is robust with respect to load disturbances which occur on a flap panel in equal proportions with respect to the pair of LVDT's which control each panel.
- the threshold T has been provided to account for the fact that deflections tend to be larger near the stowed position of the flaps and smaller near the end of travel with a schedule of several fault thresholds having step values as a function of flap position or any other relationship for accounting for flap, actuator or LVDT geometry.
- the accuracy of determining flap position is not critical in this circumstance. As described above, if a plurality of unfavorable comparisons result from the time filter, then a SKEW FAULT is generated by the controller.
- Fig. 4 illustrates a normal and a fault condition output from a LVDT.
- the LVDT output is a linear function of displacement when operation of the actuator is correct.
- LVDT output undergoes a jump in a non-linear fashion which has an increased rate of change during the time interval during which the fault or other mode is occurring as is identified by reference numeral 80.
- Fig. 5 illustrates a graph of percentage of threshold with the threshold being the set distance of movement of the actuator representative of a failure mode versus a percentage of stroke.
- the stroke is the total path of travel of the element being moved by the actuator between the travel limits such as between points A and B above.
- Step function A is a disturbance which the bandpass filter of the system must reject because it is not representative of a true failure or other mode.
- the characteristic B represents a mode which is representative of a potential failure which, as illustrated, spans approximately 1 % of the stroke between samples.
- Fig. 6 illustrates the output error of a LVDT on adjacent sides of a wing panel versus percentage of stroke.
- the slowly varying error represented by curves C and D must be accommodated by the controller 200 but does not preferably require the storing of historical data.
- Fig. 7 illustrates a translation into the frequency domain on a log-log scale of dB versus radians per second where A represents the response produced by the step function A of Fig. 5 and curve B represents the response produced by the characteristic B of Fig. 5.
- Curve E represents the desired result of bandpass filtering.
- Fig. 8 illustrates a graph of percentage of fault amplitude versus seconds illustrating the threshold T of the output of the filter of Fig. 3 which is set at 0.4 of the set distance of movement representing a failure or other mode.
- Curve A represents the response to the step function A of Fig. 5;
- curve B represents the response to characteristic B of Fig. 5 and
- curve F represents a response characteristic which the system must reject because it does not represent a condition representative of a failure or other mode.
- transducers with a microprocessor has a wider commercial use when transducer characteristics are captured for current and historical reference.
- a transducer such as an LVDT, can have a large and nonlinear output voltage versus stroke variation from LVDT to LVDT.
- any particular LVDT will display a very high degree of repeatability of output voltage versus stroke.
- Capturing a LVDT's specific output voltage versus stroke in microprocessor memory as a calibration correction will produce accurate linearity over the full stroke of the LVDT.
- Subsequent capture of the LVDT characteristic can be used, for example by maintenance, to detect system deterioration or drift when compared to previously captured historical characteristic(s).
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Abstract
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Priority Applications (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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JP10504165A JP2000514382A (en) | 1996-06-28 | 1997-06-18 | Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure |
EP97931202A EP0907557A1 (en) | 1996-06-28 | 1997-06-18 | Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure |
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Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US08/673,389 US5719566A (en) | 1996-06-28 | 1996-06-28 | Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure |
US08/673,389 | 1996-06-28 |
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WO1998000334A1 true WO1998000334A1 (en) | 1998-01-08 |
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PCT/US1997/010410 WO1998000334A1 (en) | 1996-06-28 | 1997-06-18 | Method and apparatus for detecting dormant actuator failure |
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US (1) | US5719566A (en) |
EP (1) | EP0907557A1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2000514382A (en) |
CA (1) | CA2259226A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1998000334A1 (en) |
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- 1997-06-18 CA CA002259226A patent/CA2259226A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 1997-06-18 EP EP97931202A patent/EP0907557A1/en not_active Withdrawn
- 1997-06-18 JP JP10504165A patent/JP2000514382A/en active Pending
- 1997-06-18 WO PCT/US1997/010410 patent/WO1998000334A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
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US4612844A (en) * | 1985-02-07 | 1986-09-23 | The Boeing Company | Fail-passive actuator control |
EP0288034A2 (en) * | 1987-04-23 | 1988-10-26 | The Boeing Company | Flight control system employing three controllers operating a dual actuator |
US4841209A (en) * | 1987-11-25 | 1989-06-20 | United Technologies Corporation | Actuator control system with displacement sensor fault detection |
Cited By (7)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP1884852A1 (en) * | 2006-08-04 | 2008-02-06 | Honeywell Inc. | Tuning procedure for aircraft fault detection |
US8209083B2 (en) | 2006-08-04 | 2012-06-26 | Honeywell International Inc. | Tunable architecture for aircraft fault detection |
WO2009083261A2 (en) * | 2007-12-30 | 2009-07-09 | Airbus Deutschland Gmbh | System for actuating at least one regulating flap of an aircraft and a method for checking the system. |
WO2009083261A3 (en) * | 2007-12-30 | 2009-10-15 | Airbus Operations Gmbh | System for actuating at least one regulating flap of an aircraft and a method for checking the system. |
US8746614B2 (en) | 2007-12-30 | 2014-06-10 | Airbus Operations Gmbh | System for actuating at least one positioning flap of an aircraft and a method for monitoring the system |
WO2010119280A1 (en) * | 2009-04-14 | 2010-10-21 | Moog Wolverhampton Limited | High lift devices for aircraft |
EP2945036A1 (en) * | 2014-05-08 | 2015-11-18 | Honeywell International Inc. | Speed brake alerting system and method |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
US5719566A (en) | 1998-02-17 |
EP0907557A1 (en) | 1999-04-14 |
JP2000514382A (en) | 2000-10-31 |
CA2259226A1 (en) | 1998-01-08 |
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